The Head of the House of Coombe by Frances Hodgson Burnett (best life changing books .TXT) đ
- Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett
- Performer: -
Book online «The Head of the House of Coombe by Frances Hodgson Burnett (best life changing books .TXT) đ». Author Frances Hodgson Burnett
Mrs. Heppel-Bevill had a girl of fifteen, who was a perfect catastrophe. She read things and had begun to talk about her âright to be a woman.â Emily Heppel-Bevill was only thirty-sevenâthree years from forty. Feather had reached the stage of softening in her disdain of the women in their thirties. She had found herself admitting thatâin these daysâthere were women of forty who had not wholly passed beyond the pale into that outer darkness where there was weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth. But there was no denying that this six year old baby, with the dancing step, gave oneâalmost hystericallyââto think.â Her imagination could notânever had and never would she have allowed it toâgrasp any belief that she herself could change. A Feather, No! But a creature of sixteen, eighteenâwith eyes that shapeâwith lashes an inch longâwith yards of hairâstanding by oneâs side in ten years! It was ghastly!
Coombe, in his cold perfunctory way, climbing the crooked, narrow stairs, dismissing Andrewsâlooking over the roomsâdismissing them, so to speak, and then remaining after the rest had gone to reveal to her a new abnormal moodâthat, in itself alone, was actually horrible. It was abnormal and yet he had always been more or less like that in all things. Despite everythingâeverythingâhe had never been in love with her at all. At first she had believed he wasâthen she had tried to make him care for her. He had never failed her, he had done everything in his grand seigneur fashion. Nobody dare make gross comment upon her, but, while he saw her loveliness as only such a man couldâshe had gradually realized that she had never had even a chance with him. She could not even think that if she had not been so silly and frightened that awful day six years ago, and had not lost her head, he might have admired her more and more and in the end asked her to marry him. He had said there must be no mistakes, and she had not been allowed to fall into making one. The fact that she had not, had, finally, made her feel the power of a certain fascination in him. She thought it was a result of his special type of looks, his breeding, the wonderful clothes he woreâbut it was, in truth, his varieties of inaccessibility.
âA girl might like him,â she had said to herself that nightâshe sat up late after he left her. âA girl whoâwho had up-to-date sense might. Modern people donât grow old as they used to. At fifty-five he wonât be fat, or bald and he wonât have lost his teeth. People have found out they neednât. He will be as thin and straight as he is todayâand nothing can alter his nose. He will be ten years cleverer than he is now. Buying the house for a child of that ageâbuilding additional rooms for her!â
In the fevered, rapid, deep-dipping whirl of the life which was the only one she knew, she had often seen rather trying things happenâalmost unnatural changes in situations. People had overcome the folly of being afraid to alter their minds and their views about what they had temporarily believed were permanent bonds and emotions. Bonds had become old fogeyish. Marriages went to pieces, the parties in love affairs engaged in a sort of âdance down the middleâ and turn other peopleâs partners. The rearrangement of figures sometimes made for great witticism. Occasionally people laughed at themselves as at each other. The admirers of engaging matrons had been known to renew their youth at the coming-out balls of lovely daughters in their early teens, and to end by assuming the flowery chains of a new allegiance. Time had, of course, been when such a volte face would have aroused condemnation and indignant discussion, but a humorous leniency spent but little time in selecting terms of severity. Feather had known of several such contretemps ending in quite brilliant matches. The enchanting mothers usually consoled themselves with great ease, and, if the party of each part was occasionally wittily pungent in her comments on the other, everybody laughed and nobody had time to criticize. A man who had had much to bestow and who preferred in youth to bestow it upon himself was not infrequently more in the mood for the sharing of marriage when years had revealed to him the distressing fact that he was not, and had never been, the centre of the universe, which distressing fact is one so unfairly concealed from youth in bloom.
It was, of course, but as a vaguely outlined vision that these recognitions floated through what could only be alleged to be Featherâs mind because there was no other name for it. The dark little staircase, the rejected and despised third floor, and Coombe detachedly announcing his plans for the house, had set theâso to speakârather malarious mist flowing around her. A trying thing was that it did not really dispel itself altogether, but continued to hang about the atmosphere surrounding other and more cheerful things. Almost impalpably it added to the familiar feelingâor lack of feelingâwith regard to Robin. She had not at all hated the little thing; it had merely been quite true that, in an inactive way, she had not LIKED her. In the folds of the vague mist quietly floated the truth that she now liked her less.
Benby came to see and talk to her on the business of the structural changes to be made. He conducted himself precisely as though her views on the matter were of value and could not, in fact, be dispensed with. He brought the architectâs plans with him and explained them with care. They were clever plans which made the most of a limited area. He did not even faintly smile when it revealed itself to him, as it unconsciously did, that Mrs. Gareth-Lawless regarded their adroit arrangement as a singular misuse of space which could have been much better employed for necessities of her own. She was much depressed by the ground floor addition which might have enlarged her dining-room, but which was made into a sitting-room for Robin and her future governess.
âAnd that is in ADDITION to her schoolroom which might have been thrown into the drawing-roomâbesides the new bedrooms which I needed so much,â she said.
âThe new nurse, who is a highly respectable person,â explained Benby, âcould not have been secured if she had not known that improvements were being made. The reconstruction of the third floor will provide suitable accommodations.â
The special forte of Dowson, the new nurse, was a sublimated respectability far superior to smartness. She had been mystically produced by Benby and her bonnets and jackets alone would have revealed her selection from almost occult treasures. She wore bonnets and âjackets,â not hats and coats.
âIn the calm days of Her Majesty, nurses dressed as she does. I do not mean in the riotous later years of her reignâbut earlierâwhen England dreamed in terms of Crystal Palaces and Great Exhibitions. She can only be the result of excavation,â Coombe said of her.
She was as proud of her respectability as Andrews had been of her smartness. This had, in fact, proved an almost insuperable obstacle to her engagement. The slice of a house, with its flocking in and out of chattering, smart people in marvellous clothes was not the place for her, nor was Mrs. Gareth-Lawless the mistress of her dreams. But her husband had met with an accident and must be kept in a hospital, and an invalid daughter must live by the seasideâand suddenly, when things were at their worst with her, had come Benby with a firm determination to secure her with wages such as no other place would offer. Besides which she had observed as she had lived.
âThings have changed,â she reflected soberly. âYouâve got to resign yourself and not be too particular.â
She accepted the third floor, as Benby had said, because it was to be rearranged and the Night and Day Nurseries, being thrown into one, repainted and papered would make a decent place to live in. At the beautiful little girl given into her charge she often looked in a puzzled way, because she knew a good deal about children, and about this one there was something odd. Her examination of opened drawers and closets revealed piles of exquisite garments of all varieties, all perfectly kept. In these dingy holes, which called themselves nurseries, she found evidence that money had been spent like water so that the child, when she was seen, might look like a small princess. But she found no playthingâno dolls or toys, and only one picture book, and that had âDonalâ written on the fly leaf and evidently belonged to someone else.
What exactly she would have done when she had had time to think the matter over, she never knew, because, a few days after her arrival, a tall, thin gentleman, coming up the front steps as she was going out with Robin, stopped and spoke to her as if he knew who she was.
âYou know the kind of things children like to play with, nurse?â he said.
She respectfully replied that she had had long experience with young desires. She did not know as yet who he was, but there was that about him which made her feel that, while there was no knowing what height his particular exaltation in the matter of rank might reach, one would be safe in setting it high.
âPlease go to one of the toy shops and choose for the child what she will like best. Dollsâgamesâyou will know what to select. Send the bill to me at Coombe House. I am Lord Coombe.â
âThank you, my lord,â Dowson answered, with a sketch of a curtsey, âMiss Robin, you must hold out your little hand and say âthank youâ to his lordship for being so kind. Heâs told Dowson to buy you some beautiful dolls and picture books as a present.â
Robinâs eyelashes curled against her under brows in her wide, still glance upward at him. Here was âthe oneâ again! She shut her hand tightly into a fist behind her back.
Lord Coombe smiled a littleânot much.
âShe does not like me,â he said. âIt is not necessary that she should give me her hand. I prefer that she shouldnât, if she doesnât want to. Good morning, Dowson.â
To the well-regulated mind of Dowson, this seemed treating too lightly a matter as serious as juvenile incivility. She remonstrated gravely and at length with Robin.
âLittle girls must behave prettily to kind gentlemen who are friends of their mammas. It is dreadful to be rude and not say âthank youâ,â she said.
But as she talked she was vaguely aware that her words passed by the childâs
Comments (0)